The Girl from Mexico | |
Director: | Leslie Goodwins |
Producer: | Robert Sisk |
Starring: | Lupe Vélez Donald Woods Leon Errol Linda Hayes Donald MacBride Edward Raquello |
Music: | Albert Hay Malotte Harry Tierney Roy Webb |
Cinematography: | Jack MacKenzie |
Editing: | Desmond Marquette |
Distributor: | RKO Radio Pictures |
Runtime: | 71 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
The Girl from Mexico is a 1939 American comedy film directed by Leslie Goodwins and written by Lionel Houser and Joseph Fields. The film stars Lupe Vélez, who plays a hot-headed, fast-talking Mexican singer taken to New York for a radio gig, who decides she wants the ad agency man for herself.
This low-budget film's unexpected box-office success resulted in a sequel, Mexican Spitfire, and eventually a film series of seven films all together. All eight were directed by Goodwins, used venerable comedian Leon Errol as a comic foil, and showcased Vélez's comic persona, indulging in broken-English malapropisms, troublemaking ideas, sudden fits of temper, occasional songs, and bursts of Spanish invective. The film was released June 2, 1939, by RKO Radio Pictures.[1] [2]
Denny Lindsay, a radio man, brings back a singer, Carmelita Fuenes, from Mexico.